Human rights and unequal access to care

Type :

Term papers

Pages :

9 pages

Format :

.doc

Published date :

06/05/2009

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Summary :

 
 

Table of Contents Human rights and unequal access to care Table of Contents

 
  1. Summary
  2. Introduction
  3. Insecurity and poverty
  4. The mobile community care
  5. The health unit for migrants
  6. The current state of law
  7. Socialist party supports the mobilization of 26 May 2009
  8. French socialists involved in the Brussels
  9. The social mobilization for equal access to care
  10. Conclusion
  11. Bibliography

Abstract

The right to assistance extends to health care, and any person, whatever his legal status, should enjoy access to appropriate care. However, experience shows that, in reality, the implementation of this law is based primarily on the political will of communities to develop networks of care activities adapted to the target population, which, more often, find themselves in precarious situations (the elderly, the unemployed, refugees, etc.) Based inter alia on the principles of equivalence of care and solidarity, this approach to community medicine is part of a social care multi (financial, social and professional reintegration, etc.)For many years, "Fundamental rights", often called "Liberties individual" or "rights of man myself," have been established and legally recognized (right to life and physical integrity, freedom personal right to equality, etc..), both in terms of Swiss law (federal constitutional law and federal case law, constitutional rights jurisprudence of the cantonal and district courts) and in terms of public international law (European Convention for the Protection of human rights and Fundamental Freedoms, European Social Charter, etc.)..Are there any rights that are guaranteed in the health field? In Switzerland, apart from the social security system, including the Federal Law on Health Insurance of 18 March 1994 (hereinafter LAMal) raised since its inception in 1995 the principle of compulsory membership of any person resident in Switzerland for three months, (1) doctrine and jurisprudence have admitted the existence of minimum rights in health, including "what is essential to an existence worthy of human dignity," including (2) before any medical care necessary and urgent

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About the author :

pencil image Davies J.  
Level :General public Study : Medical studies School/University : Collège universitaire de Saint-Boniface

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